All Resources

We wanted to share STAND with stopbullying.gov in hopes that it could be shared broadly with US educators and at the upcoming Bullying Prevention Summit in August.
The Will U Stand movement was started by Charleigh Gere, a Vermont teen who wanted to encourage her peers to take a stand with one another to stop bullying. She worked with her aunt, a songwriter, to compose STAND, the Anti-Bullying anthem. The song encourages youth to be the one voice, unafraid, to help victims of bullying. To get others excited about making a difference, Charleigh invited the world to participate in a crowd-sourced music video for the anthem. Clips began pouring in from all over the US and as far fledged as Australia, Ireland, Canada and the UK. The heartfelt mashup offers a positive solution to bullying. It shows victims of bullying that they are not alone and that people care.
A direct link to STAND
http://www.willUstand.com/standtheanthem.php
STAND is the first crowd sourced music video created specifically with a purpose to help end bullying. In addition to the anthem (which is free for anyone to use and share), educators can download free bullying prevention posters and signage from the Will You Stand website.
You can learn more about the project at
and http://www.willustand.com/about.php

All across the country, 50 million kids go to school every day, arriving on yellow busses, by car, or walking from home. For 90,000 of these children each year, their day doesn’t end on the bus, in the car with their parents, or walking home with their friends but, instead, in a trip to the emergency room due to violence suffered in school. In an era where children spend increasingly long hours at schools, the need for solutions to the problem of violence in school environments has never been greater. With the proper education, action, and community empowerment on the subjects of school safety, violence prevention, and holistic response to acts of violence, a future can be created where parents are confident that their children will be safe every day at school and teachers will feel secure in the workplace. To transition from our current state of society to that future, IDEAs Against Violence delivers educational programming and develops safety procedures for school communities. Since school districts have too many competing budget factors as is and providing safety for schools is a moral imperative, all IDEAs Against Violence services and programs are absolutely free.

This 2014 resource, published by the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) in collaboration with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) and the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), provides guidance for law enforcement, first responders, and administrators on strategies to address cyberbullying in their communities.

STAND UP FOR TOURETTE SYNDROME This brief video for elementary school kids illustrates the benefit of peer leadership in bullying prevention. Tourette Syndrome Association (TSA) encourages teachers, clinicians, families and especially kids who are concerned about bullying prevention (and who may be affected by Tourette Syndrome)to view, download, link to and share this great story of kids doing the right thing to prevent bullying. Please let us know what you think! ts@tsa-usa.org

We prepared this video as an motivation for kids and schoolers in general to not only carry books, pencils and/or a tablet in their backpacks, but to also include your values in what you carry and most of all, LOVE.
Video has been filmed in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Its a group of volunteers from Kroma, an advertising agency in the caribbean.

StopHazing is the national leader in resources for hazing research and prevention. The main purpose of StopHazing is to serve as a resource for accurate, up-to-date hazing information for students, parents, educators, and community members. Our website features our research, interactive data, graphics, and information of hazing laws and policies.

The American Educational Research Association (AERA) today issued a new report titled Prevention of Bullying in Schools, Colleges, and Universities: Research Report and Recommendations. The report results from the work of a blue-ribbon AERA task force mandated to prepare and present practical short-term and long-term recommendations to address bullying of children and youth. The report’s release coincides with the association’s 94th Annual Meeting in San Francisco, where more than 15,000 education researchers are gathered to discuss research findings.